ZURICH, Dec 18 (Reuters) - Italy's Fabio Cannavaro completed an outstanding year of achievement on Monday when he added FIFA's World Player of the Year crown to the European Footballer of the Year award he won last month.

Cannavaro, who captained his country to victory in the World Cup final in Berlin in July, beat off competition from Brazil's Ronaldinho and retired French great Zinedine Zidane in a vote by national team coaches and skippers.

'It's an unbelievable moment,' said the 33-year-old Real
Madrid defender at the awards ceremony inside Zurich's opera
house. 'It really has been a golden year.'

Cannavaro ended Ronaldinho's two-year reign as World Player
of the Year after he also succeeded the Barcelona playmaker as
European Footballer of the Year.

Zidane, who quit after the World Cup, previously won the
FIFA award in 1998, 2000 and 2003.

'The competition was scary, it was so strong,' added
Cannavaro. 'After winning the World Cup and the European
Footballer of the Year award too, I do not think I can ask for
anything else.'

Cannavaro is the first defender to win the FIFA award since
its inception in 1991.

Only three defensive players have won the European award,
Soviet Union goalkeeper Lev Yashin in 1963, West Germany sweeper
Franz Beckenbauer (1972, 1976) and Germany libero Matthias
Sammer (1996).

'It is not usual for a defender to be sitting alongside
Ronaldinho and Zinedine Zidane, who get to do marvellous things
all season, so I saw it as a victory just to be here,' Cannavaro
said.

The Italian paid particular tribute to Zidane, his
predecessor in the number five shirt at Real and a controversial
choice on the World Player shortlist following his red card in
the World Cup final.

'When I first came to Real everybody asked me what it meant
to be wearing the same shirt,' said Cannavaro. 'I can only say
now what I said then, it is an honour to wear the same number as
such a great player.'

Like Zidane, Cannavaro has been involved in his fair share
of controversy this year, not least when he helped Juventus win
a second successive Serie A title only for the club to be
stripped of the crown and relegated following a probe into
alleged match-fixing.

Italy's World Cup success was achieved against the backdrop
of that investigation and Cannavaro went into the tournament
facing criticism after he defended former Juventus general
manager Luciano Moggi, who was at the centre of the allegations.

'I would like to dedicate this award to Italian football,'
said Cannavaro on Monday. 'Everyone knows the problems we faced
before the World Cup and I hope this award can mark a rebirth
for Italian football.'

Ronaldinho was still wearing his trademark grin despite
being jet-lagged after flying from Barcelona's Club World Cup
final defeat in Japan.

'It is a privilege to be sitting here next to Cannavaro,'
said the Brazilian.

'I already feel like a winner because the nomination is a
reward for my career so far. Now I just want to help my team and
do so in such a way that I can make it to Zurich every year.'

Brazil midfielder Marta was named women's World Player of
the Year after finishing third at the 2004 awards and second
last year.

The 20-year-old, who scored four semi-final goals to lead
Swedish club Umea into next April's UEFA Cup final, beat
experienced American Kristine Lilly and Germany playmaker Renate
Lingor. Giacinto Facchetti, who died in September, was posthumously
given the FIFA Presidential Award.

'We will always remember him as an extraordinary
player...but above all as a wonderful person,' said FIFA
president Sepp Blatter of the former Inter Milan and Italy
defender.

World soccer's governing body gave its annual Fair Play
Award to the 2006 World Cup fans in recognition of what it
called a 'highly impressive example of unity and understanding
between different peoples'.